Despite the heavy press coverage of smartphone operating systems like iPhone and Android, sometimes the most intriguing mobile innovations come from other companies. Case in point: Nokia's newly released "bots" for its Nokia N97 line of handsets. These four individual software programs run in the background, learning your mobile habits by passively collecting data on how you use your phone. After gaining a sense of your daily tasks and routines, the bots personalize your phone, doing everything from rearranging your applications based on usage to automating the switch between mobile profiles. Incredible!
There are four distinct mobile bots now available as a bundled download here from Nokia Labs, the community site featuring beta, non-commercialized programs for Nokia handsets.
Currently, the collection includes the following:
In combination, what these bots deliver is a more adaptive UI and mobile phone experience. As your behaviors change, the bots learn and their suggestions change. More importantly, you don't have to configure these bots - they figure everything out on their own.
Currently, the bots work on Nokia N97 and Nokia N97 Mini handsets only.
Although these bots are still in beta, they represent the course mobile smartphones should be taking - and not just Nokia smartphones, either. With over 160,000 iPhone applications now available, 20,000 some Android apps and thousands more in the app stores for Palm, Windows and Blackberry, we're getting overwhelmed by our mobile options. How brilliant an idea is it that your phone should learn your behaviors then organize your apps for you? That would be a major improvement over, say, the iPhone's DIY app organization tools.
And while Android's AudioManager widget is a handy way to get one-touch access to your phone's volume settings, how much better would it be if your phone automatically knew when to go silent?
That being said, we have seen some interesting patents receive approval for iPhone - like its location-aware homescreen or location-based social networking for example. However, we actually haven't seen any improvements to the OS that would result in an adaptive phone that learns from our behaviors. (Of course, who knows what Apple has in store for the future?)
Smartphone makers should take a cue from Nokia's innovation and expand the meaning of the word "smartphone." It's time for manufactures to build devices that don't just run apps but that run apps that make the phone itself smarter. Why not take advantage of geo-location's power, learn from user behaviors and enable one-click features that take the place of manual configurations? That's what a true "smartphone" would do. And maybe one day, all will. Until then, Nokia users, prepare to be envied - get your new bots here.
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